A companion as the cause of latitude-dependent effects in the wind of Eta Carinae
Jose H. Groh (1, 2), Thomas I. Madura (2), D. J. Hillier (3), C. J. H., Kruip (4), and G. Weigelt (2) ((1) Geneva Observatory, Switzerland (2), Max-Planck-Institute for Radioastronomy, Bonn (3) University of Pittsburgh,, USA, (4) Leiden University, Netherlands)

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic observations and radiative transfer models to analyze how a companion star influences the wind structure and spectral line profiles of Eta Carinae, revealing latitudinal and azimuthal effects.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the companion star's wind-wind collision cavity explains observed spectral variations better than primary star rotation models.
Findings
Wind-wind collision cavity affects H alpha line profiles.
Latitudinal and azimuthal variations are dominated by the companion star.
Models overestimate primary wind absorption due to unmodeled photoionization.
Abstract
We analyze spatially resolved spectroscopic observations of the Eta Carinae binary system obtained with HST/STIS. Eta Car is enshrouded by the dusty Homunculus nebula, which scatters light emitted by the central binary and provides a unique opportunity to study a massive binary system from different vantage points. We investigate the latitudinal and azimuthal dependence of H line profiles caused by the presence of a wind-wind collision (WWC) cavity created by the companion star. Using two-dimensional radiative transfer models, we find that the wind cavity can qualitatively explain the observed line profiles around apastron. Regions of the Homunculus which scatter light that propagated through the WWC cavity show weaker or no H alpha absorption. Regions scattering light that propagated through a significant portion of the primary wind show stronger P Cygni absorption. Our models…
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